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Your Cat: A Revolutionary Aproach to Feline Health and Happiness

Your Cat: A Revolutionary Aproach to Feline Health and Happiness
By Elizabeth M Hodgkins

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'Dr. Hodgkins's discussions are provocative, and disturbing, and the problems they identify will not be easy to rectify quickly. Nonetheless, they are long overdue.' ---Alice Villalobos, president of the American Association of Human-Animal Bond Veterinarians and Director of the Animal Oncology Consultation Service, Woodland Hills (Torrance, CA) and Pawspice Care Clinic (Norwalk, CA) In this controversial new book, dedicated veterinarian Elizabeth M. Hodgkins, D.V.M., Esq., raises the alarm regarding the serious flaws in the commercial diets we feed our cats and the nutritional diseases that result. Your Cat turns today's conventional wisdom of cat care on its head with completely new yet remarkably easy-to-follow guidelines for every cat owner. Features include: The real problem with pet foodsParasites, vaccines, and litter-box trainingObesity and feline diabetesPreventative nutrition for the older catThe ten great myths of cat careFrom kitten-rearing to the adult cat's middle years to caring for the geriatric cat, Dr. Hodgkins explores the full spectrum of proper cat care, as well as rampant deadly feline diseases like hyperthyroidism, asthma, skin allergies, and gum disease. She provides an explanation of the origin and thorough discussion of the very latest treatments. Illuminated by brief case histories from illness to health, this indispensable manual is one book that every modern cat owner must have on their shelf.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #41632 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-06-26
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 304 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review

Advance Praise for Your Cat
 
 “A great resource for all cat enthusiasts---from the novice seeking basic information to the more sophisticated owner looking for detail. Well organized with information that is easy to find.”
---Laurie Schiff, Esq., All-Breed Cat Judge and General Counsel for the International Cat Association “A highly respected expert in feline health, Dr. Hodgkins has not written just another pretty book about cats. She has given us invaluable knowledge that can help us keep our felines healthy.”
---Kay DeVilbiss, All-Breed Cat Judge and president of the International Cat Association
 
“Dr. Hodgkins’ book should be mandatory reading for the caring cat lover and feline practitioner!”
---Adriana Kajon, Ph.D., All-Breed Cat Judge, The International Cat Association
 
“What sets Dr. Hodgkins’ book apart from all others is the passionate message that she delivers---that we, as owners, can make a dramatic difference in the health of our cats by simply remembering that a cat’s digestive system obligates it to eat a diet dramatically different from that provided by all commercial dry cat food. A compelling argument for change. . . . So far, my cats thoroughly approve of our own home trials!”
---Carolyn Osier, Allbreed Cat Judge, Cat Fancier’s Association, and breeder of award-winning Abyssinians since 1969
 
“I would highly recommend this book for all people who have a passion and great love for cats.”
---Ann Reed, D.V.M., MS, Diplomate, American College Veterinary Radiology
 
“Dr. Hodgkins offers a sensible strategy for avoiding the laundry list of serious ailments with which today's cats often needlessly struggle.”
---Lisa Pierson, D.V.M.
 
“It'’ more than Dr. Hodgkins’s unwavering commitment to feline medicine that I admire, it’s her willingness to think outside the box of conventional medicine. She’s all about saving lives."
---Steve Dale, host of Steve Dale’s Pet World and Pet Central on WGN Radio; syndicated newspaper column (Tribune Media Services); contributing editor at USA Weekend; and contributor to Cat Fancy magazine
 
“This plucky book should be required reading for every cat lover and veterinary professional.”
---Anne Jablonski, www.catnutrition.org

About the Author

Elizabeth M. Hodgkins, D.V.M., Esq., has been a veterinarian since 1977. She currently owns and runs her cats-only veterinary practice, All About Cats Health and Wellness Center, in Yorba Linda, California. Dr. Hodgkins graduated from the University of California at Davis School of Veterinary Medicine and went on to serve as the director of technical affairs at the largest proprietary pet-food manufacturer in the world. During this time, she developed the passion for veterinary nutrition that drove her later investigations into this subject, particularly the management of feline obesity and diabetes.

 

In 2001, Dr. Hodgkins was awarded a U.S. and international patent for a novel and highly successful approach to managing feline diabetes that has effected long-term remission in well over 80 percent of her diabetic patients. She is also a breeder of internationally award-winning Occicats and exhibits her purebred cats across the U.S. Please visit her Web site at www.yourcatbook.com.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Chapter 1 Most pet lovers are familiar with the idea that dogs and cats are carnivores. That is, both animals can and do derive valuable nutrition from the voluntary consumption of meat. In this regard, many mammals, including people, pigs, bears, raccoons, and myriad others have seemingly similar carnivorous tendencies. When meat is available, such animals will take advantage of the situation and eat it. There is a significant difference between cats and all of these other mammals, however. Dogs, people, pigs, bears, and raccoons, etc., are all omnivores that eat meat when it is available. Cats, big and small, are obligatory carnivores. The omnivore does not eat meat as a mandatory requirement for life; vegetable food sources can make up a very large part of their diet, and may even be properly balanced to provide all needed nutrients for health. For the cat, however, meat, and the nutrients found only in meat, are essential for survival.  The Cat Is Not a Small Dog Critical differences between dogs and cats, the most popular of all household pet animals, are clearly illustrated in the genetic, anatomic, and metabolic differences between the two. Scientists who have studied the dietary habits of carnivores, omnivores, and herbivores tell us that these “rungs” on the food-chain were established and reinforced during the evolutionary histories of each type of animal (see www.catinfo.org/zorans_article.pdf). The work of these experts suggests that the members of the superfamily Feloidea, including today’s cat, evolved rapidly in distant prehistoric times, but then stopped abruptly in that progression. Carnivorous animals belonging to other families of animals, including the Canoidea, to which the dog belongs, seem to have progressed beyond this point to meet changing evolutionary needs.
Good evidence for the cat’s relatively ancient nature can be found in the lower number of chromosomes in its genetic makeup, compared with a much larger number for the group that includes modern dogs. The cat’s cells carry thirty-eight chromosomes, while the dog’s cells carry seventy-eight. This does not mean that the cat lacks physical and genetic sophistication equal to the dog. It means that it made a perfect and permanent fit within its spot in the environment early on and experienced little additional pressure to change its genes.
Dogs and cats also have remarkably different, but highly specialized, anatomy. Dogs have forty-two permanent teeth, whereas cats have only thirty. Dogs have more molars than do cats, with a specialized shape for crushing, associated with their intake of plant material. In contrast, the shape of feline teeth is specialized for grasping and tearing flesh. By its structure, the cat’s jaw has far more restricted side-to-side and front-to-back mobility than does the dog’s, limiting its ability to grind a varied vegetation-containing diet as the dog can do. The cat’s eyes and ears are positioned forward on the head to provide exquisite acuity of vision and hearing when tracking prey, particularly at night. Retractable claws, seen on cats but not dogs, are another specialized feature of an animal that must chase, catch, and bring down all of its food in the form of wild prey.
The gastrointestinal tracts of the two species are also quite different. Those differences emphasize the differences in the natural diets of each. Science tells us that modifications in the basic structure of this important organ system from species to species are closely connected to diet. The cat’s stomach, caecum (appendix), and colon, segments of the gastrointestinal tract most associated with digestion of vegetable matter, are smaller than those segments in the dog. The length of the feline intestine in proportion to its body length is short compared with that of the dog, indicating that the cat’s evolutionary diet was highly digestible (protein and fat), whereas the dog consumes far more vegetable matter. The inner lining of the cat’s stomach has significantly greater surface area than does the same part of the dog’s stomach. Anatomists believe that increases in the relative size of this stomach area are an adaptation to the digestion of higher-meat, more calorie-dense diets. The caecum in the cat is very primitive, whereas it is much better developed in the dog. Once again, this portion of the gastrointestinal tract assists in the processing of fibrous, nonmeat dietary constituents.
Equally telling of the cat’s strictly carnivorous origins are its nutrient requirements, especially its requirements for protein. Research done on the 1970s and ’80s showed conclusively that protein requirements in kittens and cats far exceed those of puppies or dogs. The cat, unlike omnivores such as the dog, “burns” protein to make energy for its everyday use, under all circumstances. Most other animals burn large amounts of protein for energy only when protein is plentiful in the diet.
In contrast, the cat has an ongoing high requirement for protein to turn into energy, even when dietary protein intake is very limited. During starvation or excessive protein-restriction, the cat is forced to disassemble its body’s own constituent proteins (enzymes, antibodies, organ tissues, and so on) to produce fuel for energy to keep the cells alive and functioning. Thus, in the most fundamental way, the health and tissue integrity of the cat is dependent upon the continual intake of highly digestible protein, especially protein from meat.
Another of the cat’s claims to the top-predator spot in the food chain is the absolute requirement for an essential fatty acid, arachidonic acid, found only in meat. Also, cats must consume preformed vitamin A from animal-source foods because they are unable to make this essential vitamin from the beta carotene found in plants. The list of the specializations of the cat’s internal machinery that reflect its evolutionary adaptations to a life as an obligatory carnivore goes on and on.  Not All Livers Are Alike By far, the most fascinating characteristic of the cat compared to omnivores like the dog is the manner in which its liver functions. The cat’s very high protein and amino acid requirements arise from the constantly high activity of certain enzymes in the feline liver. These enzymes disassemble the amino acids in protein to make them available for production of energy in a process called gluconeogenesis. Essentially, the liver is the organ that is responsible for the high and constant burn rate of protein in the cat’s body. Omnivores such as the dog have a liver that is also capable of this function, but omnivores turn the rate of this function up or down depending on how much dietary protein is available. In contrast, the cat’s liver protein “burn rate” is set high at all times, even when dietary protein is scarce or entirely absent. Death from protein starvation can be very rapid in this species.
In the liver, protein amino acids are processed into glucose (sugar) and sent into the bloodstream to supply the body’s need for this energy nutrient. In a meat-eating species like the cat, accustomed to little dietary carbohydrate in its evolutionary environment, the liver will manufacture the great majority of the animal’s needed glucose, which is the primary energy supply for the animal’s brain. Because there is little glucose in a high-meat diet, this is an essential task for an obligatory carnivore. The liver of omnivores, including people and dogs, have multiple enzyme systems for handling dietary carbohydrate; the cat has only one such enzyme system, with limited capacity to deal with high carbohydrate consumption.
Such specializations make the cat fit its niche perfectly; indeed, the fittest animal in a niche will be the one with the fewest and simplest systems to meet its survival needs. The cat’s ancestors did not need the ability to turn their liver’s protein burn rate up and down. Similarly, they did not require significant carbohydrate-handling capabilities. The specialized glucose-from-protein systems that have been genetically retained by the modern cat are always active at a high rate, obligating felines to eat more protein than their omnivorous counterparts. Because of this, unfortunately, the cat will suffer far more harm than will omnivores in situations where protein is insufficient or absent. We will see how important this requirement is when we discuss many of the common diseases of our pet cats.  Out of Africa The present-day house cat (Felis domesticus) is generally thought to have descended thousands of years ago from a small wild cat (Felis lybica) native to the deserts of North Africa. Such a dry climate heritage would explain many distinct characteristics of this species. Cats are capable of surviving for long periods without water, and will naturally consume very little free water when they are feeding on canned cat food or fresh meat. Cats can produce urine that is highly concentrated compared to that of the dog and other animals that evolved in more water-rich environments. The cat’s natural tendency to produce urine with a great deal of metabolic waste in a highly concentrated form can be dangerous if a cat feeds on a diet that is low in water, because this desert animal has a naturally low thirst drive. The cat that is consuming dry cat food seldom drinks enough additional free water to balance the dry state of the food. This results in especially concentrated urine with attendant medical problems, including certain kinds of bladder disease. Dry food also contains ingredients that interfere with the natural acidity of the cat’s urine. Highly concentrated, alkaline urine from dry food consumption is associated with serious, even fatal urinary tract problems.  The Predator Lifestyle The cat’s ancient predator–behaviors are very much a part of its present-day life. Some wild cat spec...


Customer Reviews

A must have book for any cat guardian5
Dr. Hodgkins has written a provocative illuminating book about cat care, an essential book for anyone with a cat.
I bought 12 copies and distributed it to all my friends. It's $35,000 worth of vet advice for cheap.

Diet figured prominently in the book. If you want to know why no cat should NEVER eat any dry food or dry treats get this book. It goes into all the illnesses caused by dry food for cats.

Raw meat she says is best with ground bone and minimal supplementation.

Great book - buy it!4
This is a fantastic book which will finally tell you, clearly, how you should be feeding your cat. She's a cat-only vet, and used to run a pet food company--so she has an insider's critique of the industry. (I took off one star because I'm not crazy about how it's organized.)